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Molecular clouds interacting with supernova remnants may be subject to a greatly enhanced irradiation by cosmic rays produced at the shocked interface between the ejecta and the molecular gas. Over the past decade, broad-band observations have provided important clues about these relativistic particles and indicate that they may dominate over the locally observed cosmic-ray population by a significant amount. In this paper, we estimate the enhancement and find that the cosmic ray energy density can be up to $sim$1000 times larger in the molecular cloud than in the field. This enhancement can last for a few Myr and leads to a corresponding increase in the ionization fraction, which has important consequences for star formation. Ionization fractions in] molecular cloud cores determine, in part, the rate of ambipolar diffusion, an important process in core formation and pre-collapse evolution. Ionization fractions in newly formed circumstellar disks affect the magneto-rotational instability mechanism, which in turn affects the rate of disk accretion. As estimated here, the increased ionization acts to increase the ambipolar diffusion time by a factor of $sim30$ and thereby suppresses star formation. In contrast, the increased ionization fraction reduces the sizes of dead zones in accretion disks (by up to an order of magnitude) and thus increases disk accretion rates (by a comparable factor).
The giant molecular clouds (MCs) found in the Milky Way and similar galaxies play a crucial role in the evolution of these systems. The supernova explosions that mark the death of massive stars in these regions often lead to interactions between the
About 30 Galactic supernova remnants (SNRs) are thought to be physically associated with molecular clouds (MCs). These systems are prime g-ray source candidates as the accelerated particles from shock fronts collide with the surrounding high-density
We report the detection of gamma-ray emission coincident with four supernova remnants (SNRs) using data from the Large Area Telescope on board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. G349.7+0.2, CTB 37A, 3C 391 and G8.7-0.1 are supernova remnants known
Cosmic rays pervade the Galaxy and are thought to be accelerated in supernova shocks. The interaction of cosmic rays with dense interstellar matter has two important effects: 1) high energy (>1 GeV) protons produce {gamma}-rays by {pi}0-meson decay;
Recent discovery of the X-ray neutral iron line (Fe I Kalpha at 6.40 keV) around several supernova remnants (SNRs) show that MeV cosmic-ray (CR) protons are distributed around the SNRs and are interacting with neutral gas there. We propose that these